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Festival 2010 14 - 18 April in Cologne
Festival 2010
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Yeo-haeng-ja (A Brand New Life)
Frankreich/Südkorea 2009, Feature film, 92'
Director Ounie Lecomte | Screenplay Ounie Lecomte, Ounie Lecomte | Director of Photography Hyun Seok Kim | Editor Hyun-Joo Kim | Sound Choi Jaiho | Actor/Actress Moon Sungkeun, Oh Mansuk, Ko A-Sung, Kim Saeron, Sul Kyounggu, Park Myoungshin, Park Doyeon | Producer Now Films
Synopsis
South Korea in 1975. Jinhee is nine years old and lives in a small town in this Asian country. One day her father announces that they are to go on a journey. He doesn't tell Jinhee where they are going but nonetheless, she has no choice but to obey his instructions and accompany him.
On the outskirts of the capital, Seoul, Jinhee's father puts Jinhee into the care of Catholic nuns who run an orphanage; he hopes that she will be adopted by 'new' parents. Jinhee is horrified and can't believe that her devoted father would want to disown her so cruelly. She desperately tries to contact him and even tries to run away. But all is in vain.
Finally, she resigns herself to her fate. Jinhee gets used to life at the orphanage, where she makes a lot of new friends. Sookhee, who is three years older than Jinhee, teaches her all sorts of tricks and ruses that make life easier at the orphanage. Yeshin is seventeen and the oldest orphan at the home. A hip injury has left her handicapped. Not everyone at the home will find a new family but, deep in her heart, Jinhee doesn't really want one. She'd rather stay put and live in hope of one day being able to see her father again.

The French-Korean director Ounie Lecomte went through a similar experience to that of her young protagonist when she lived at Saint Paul's orphanage in Seoul in 1975/76. Nonetheless, she doesn't want her film to be regarded as an entirely autobiographical work.

"Starting with a film script that navigates all the hazards of melodrama with extreme skill, this film transports us straight into the world of an unhappy little girl. We witness a crucial phase of change and confusion. The sure-handed and precise directing, along with the uncomplicated and moving portrayal of the characters draws in the audience very closely to the struggle of the child: she responds to her distress not with passive acceptance, but with a furious will to live; confronting the desire to die with the desire to live. Our Jury was deeply moved."
Special Mention, International Jury Generation Kplus, Berlinale 2010
Biography
Born 1966 in Seoul, Ounie Lecomte was adopted at nine by a French family. She studied fashion design, worked as a film costume designer and acted in films such as Olivier Assayas' Paris s'éveille (1991). She returned to Korea for the first time in the same year to act in a film that was never finished, and renewed ties with her biological family. She attended a screenwriting workshop at La femis and began working on her first film Yeo-haeng-ja.
Films